Hi Victor Notworthy,
I am so done with this. Next subject.
Quoting Victor Narwortey <[log in to unmask]>:
> So you don't need to anger Ghana and Ghanaian to fulfill your
> ulterior motives.
> listen! Mr Jallow !!! There is only one person that "sucks" here
> and it's you.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jun 10, 2010, at 2:43 PM, Mathew Jallow
> <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> What kind of ? is this? I am darn proud of whatI am born into. I am
> just disgusted the culture we have embraced and seem unable or
> unwilling to change.
> It is not that we have not attempted to dislodge Jammeh, we have,
> five times and they have all failed. That is not stopping us from
> trying; and we still are. It will happen; believe me; with or
> without outside help.
>
>
>
> Quoting Victor Narwortey <[log in to unmask]>:
>
> Herr ! Mr Jallow,
> There are no men in the Gambia? Why do you want Ghana to topple your
> president for you? Like I said before, you are the problem you are
> talking about, and the solution you are looking for. It's in
> between your legs, get some ball and act now!!
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jun 10, 2010, at 12:53 PM, Mathew Jallow
> <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Hmmmmm. Nice advice at the end there. That is a good bumper-sticker;
> isn't it. I will marinate on it for a little while. All said I get
> your point and aurprise, surprise, I think the message is kind of
> valid.
> Back to Mills and Jammeh. The sole survivor has testified and I have
> the full story, which I will look up in the archives of The Gambia
> Echo and post here. And guess what, six months ago, Jammeh dug up
> eight bodies and shipped them to Ghana. Now they are saying they
> were only eight murdered by Jammeh's thug soldiers. Personally, I
> wanted to Ghana to be so mad, really mad and attack The Gambia and
> help us remove this idiot we have; like Tanzania did to Idi Amin. I
> have published several stories around this issue in Ghanaian
> newspaper; dating back to John Kaffur's presidency, and I still do.
> I wrote an open letter to Mills after his meeting with Jammeh,
> which was publised in the: modernghana newspaper. So, on this,
> atleast, I have someone who thinks like I do. Thanks.
>
> Quoting Victor Narwortey <[log in to unmask]>:
>
> I was one of the few people who was not satisfied with the way the
> Mills administration handled the state sponsored murder of the 44
> Ghanaians. And the body language and photo short of the meeting
> between Jammeh and Mills at the Tripoli meeting has obviously been
> sending some signals. That being said, I'm not privy to any
> underhand currupt activities to cover up this heneous crime. These
> questions still bother me though; (1) why was the bodies buried in
> haste months before the meeting? And (2) why has the case not
> been sent to the international court of justice in the Hague? So
> at least the only survival who is well and alive in Ghana now can
> come forward and testify on what really occurred on that horrible
> day.
> Mr Jallow, I gotta let you know, any form of stereotypical
> generalization is just wrong. Your submission on Africa and Africans
> is just a clear case of you ignoring history. Don't forget " if
> you have your finger pointing at something or someone, you should
> know the rest are pointing at you. Please !! Look within your
> self, you are the problem you are talking about and the solution
> you are looking for.
> Respectfuly
> Victor
>
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jun 10, 2010, at 10:04 AM, Mathew Jallow
> <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> I am simply making an accusation based on my knowledge of how Yahya
> Jammeh operates. Secondly, at AU's meeting in Tripoli late last
> year, Mills and Jammeh met to discuss the massacre. At that meeting
> Jammeh agreed to compensate the families of the dead, they shook
> hands and called it a day. If the Commonwealth Secretariat had not
> intervened, Mills was ready to give a pass. And you think Mills
> will do that because Jammeh charmed him? Corruption and
> projecting on an air of importance is our second mature, when in
> fact we are empty no-bodies. We just suck as a people. And it is
> not only we Africans; it is blacks in America, in the Caribbean,
> in South America; everywhere. If the U.S. had a tenth of the
> natural resources Africa has, they would be building underground
> cities on the moon by now. I cannot prove it, but I am pretty
> sure Mills got his palm greased by Jammeh. And I can bet my
> bottom dollar on this. It is not a crime to
> accuse, is it?
>
> Quoting Thomas Adeetuk <[log in to unmask]>:
>
> Brother Matthew,
>
> An interesting contribution on the drugs seizure in the Gambia. My
> concern however is, where is the link between President Jammeh
> playing host to a Guinea Bissau drug baron and the payment of
> "bribe" to President Mills of Ghana?. The massacre of Ghanaians in
> Gambia happened in 2005 when President Mills was not in power. By
> implication, are you saying President Mills on assuming office
> put pressure on President Jammeh resulting in the payment of
> "lots of money" to silence him? You make a valid point alluding
> to the fact that African leaders have not done a good job of
> keeping drugs off our shores, but please do not throw mud at
> leaders for who you may not have facts to support. Unless if you
> do not mind sharing any facts to back up your accusations of
> President Mills. My two cents.
>
> On 06/08/10, Mathew Jallow <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> This is the new Gambia, but The Gambia is, infact, only a minor
> player in this West African drug trade. The drug trade, as a matter
> of fact, extends from Nigeria to Mauritania. This is not the
> first drug seizure, for The Gambia as a matter of fact. A ship
> laden with bags of what was marked as "Fertilizer" for Gambia's
> Department of Agriculture, was apprehened by a US Coast Guard
> ship, in the high seas off the coast of Mauritania and Senegal.
> The ship was bound for the port of Banjul. The Gambia has been a
> center of transhipment of South American drugs bound for Europe
> and the US for many years now. Guinea Bissau that is developing
> into the Somalia of West Africa, is the major hub in the
> triangular drug trade; South America to West africa to Europe; or
> South America, West Africa and the US. Bissau has not had a
> stable government in many years now, and the drug baron there,
> who was also head of the Bissau navy was
> exiled in The
> Gambia for
> more than a year, as guest Gambia's Yahya Jammeh. By the way, for
> those who do not know it, Jammeh massacred 44 Ghanaians in The
> Gambia in 2005,accusing them of mercenary activities with Gambia's
> overseas dissidents. He probably paid Ghana's Mills lots of money
> to not proceed with the investigation. So there you have it. The
> more things change, the more they remain the same. Are we
> Africans cursed or what? Me think so.
>
>
>
>
> Quoting Ann Marie Dawson <[log in to unmask]>:
>
> Ann Marie Dawson saw this story on the BBC News website and thought you
> should see it.
>
>
> ** $1bn of cocaine seized in Gambia **
> At least two tonnes of cocaine with a street value of some $1bn is
> seized in
> The Gambia, destined for Europe.
> < http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/fr/-/2/hi/world/africa/10268510.stm >
>
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> --
> Ann Marie
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> --
> Thomas Adeetuk
> College Library
> Helen C. White Hall
> 600 N. Park Street
> Madison, WI 53706
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